The osteopath was working in a Wheat Ridge clinic when an undercover Drug Enforcement Administration agent recorded a visit with Clemmer in which he was able to score a prescription for oxycodone without reporting serious pain.

In May, U.S. Magistrate Judge Kathleen Tafoya ruled Clemmer was too much of a danger to grant him bond despite arguments that he couldn’t write prescriptions anymore. Clemmer’s medical license is suspended.

Clemmer’s attorney, Mitchell Baker asked U.S. District Judge Robert Blackburn to reverse Tafoya’s ruling, arguing his client didn’t have a criminal history and wasn’t a threat to the community. He also pointed out that Clemmer’s pending case over a traffic stop in Wheat Ridge where guns and marijuana were found in his car was dismissed.

“The defendant shall not write or issue or attempt to write or issue any prescription for any drug, medicine or controlled substance,” Blackburn wrote in his order.

Clemmer returns to court for a status update on his case on Oct. 28. No trial date has been set.

I actually saw him and thought something was fishy when I had an allergic reaction to the pain prescribed to me and they didn’t see me just phoned in my prescription for steroids to get rid of the servere hives I had. What stinks for me is that I had legit problems and can’t get his medical records on me for my new doctor. Of course the victims of his prescription pad are more important, I just can’t believe that addiction didn’t have him wrapped up to and he was supposed to be helping so many, and he ended up harming them.